Thursday, June 11, 2009

Jan Gross

Daniel Goldhagen famously argued in Hitler's Willing Executioners that to be German on the eve of the War was to be anti-Semitic; to be a Nazi, however, required a willingness to act on this intrinsic xenophobia. Goldhagen's thesis was on my mind as I read (and recently re-read) Jan Gross's Neighbors - a book which, to my mind at least, falls under that category of 'indispensable.' Most striking among Gross's discoveries: first, that organized massacres of Jews continued in Poland as late as 1947 (two years after Potsdam and Yalta); and second, that Polish historiography is almost entirely void of studies dedicated to the role of ethnic Poles in the destruction of European Jewry. This is a dark book, but as I say, a vital one as well.

No comments:

Post a Comment